7 V .-i J S.1 DAKOTA COUNTY . HERALD, VOLUME XVIII DAKOTA CITY, NEB., FRIDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1906. NUMBER 18. V UTEST BY TELEGRAPH SUMMARY OP THE NEWS CP THE WHOLB WORLD. ! ENTIRE WALK IS HIS NKGllO KOLMEit Iiritl.S AVHITIJ WOMAN TO etrrrEK. 'Membra1 of Itcgtinmt Involved In Brownsville Affair Likely Would Have Been Lynched If Caught-Victim . Wife of 1 Ilcno Physician. Race feeling la at white heat and threats of lynching are heard on every hand as a result of an assault commit ted on Mrs. T. S. Clifford, wife of a prominent physician of El Reno, Okla., Thursday afternoon by a negro of the Twenty-fifth Infantry. Mrs. Clifford and her sister, Mrs. S H. Clarke, were attempting to pass the soldier when he viciously grabbed Mrs. Clifford around the waiBt and threw her Into the street, exclaiming that the sidewalk belonged to him. Mrs. Clifford screamed" for assist once, but the assailant escaped before help arrived. News of the attack spread rapidly and the entire police department, re inforced by several hundred men and boys, searched the town and surround ing country, but Thursday evening the chase was given up. The negro was In uniform and must return to the post or become a deserter. Word was sent to Port Reno and all .absentees noted. Both Mrs. Clifford and her sister are posltlvo they can Identify the man and will go to Fort Reno and attempt to pick him from the soldiers who were out of the porl when the assault occurred. THOUSANDS MAY PERISH. ,Ton Million Oiilneso Arc Earing Star vation. A Victoria, B. C. dispatch says: I China has decided to appeal to Eu rope and -America for $ 1,250,000 for the relief of the famine sufferers in central Chi 'a, where 10,000,000 Chi nese are faced with starvation this winter, according to advices from the orient. People, maddened by hunger, are reported 'to be pillaging the , A- mens of officials. A foreigner who has reached Shanghai from the famine stricken district says men and women, naked excepting a few rsgs around their loins, are seen by the roadsides starving, with naken children at their breasts. i The famine threatens to equal the appalling one thirty years ago which devastated and destroyed hundreds of thousands of people. " From one point the outlook U worse than then, as the district Is now more thickly populated TERRIER'S BITE FATAL. A New York Woman Dies of Hydro phobia After Short Illnees. Mrs. Charles Weeks, aged 60, of j New Rochelle, N. Y., died at her home from hydrophobia Thursday. ' She was bitten three weeks ago by ,a small fox terrier that her husband 'found In the street. On the day It bit her she was playing with It. The dog exhibited no signs of rabies, and not of the family thought anything of the Incident. A few days ago Mrs. 'Weeks wsa taken 111, and from the fir si exhibited sysmptoms of rabies. British Towns Snowbound. A blizzard which commenced Christ Alas night continued throughout Great Britain Thursday. The country dis tricts In the most northern parts of ithe country are snowbound, trains are blocked, roads are impassable and ru ral villages are temporarily cut off ifrom communication with each other. IA number of deaths have been report ed in the bleak Scottish hills. Declare Strike Broken. The Southern Pacific officials at El Paso, Tex., Thursday declared the flre rnien'g strike virtually broken. They jaay all trains are arriving practically ion time, and freight is 'being accepted ias usual. The firemen, through Joseph Bedford, grievance chairman of that 'district, declare they will tie up the Harrlman and connecting systems completely. One Killed In CoIlUlon. In a collision between a Big Four tugine and an Interurban car at Dan ville, III., Thursday, Charles Burnett, it Mattoon, was killed and Conductor iGarver, of the traction car, seriously Injured; Robert Ttngler, a St. Louis passenger, roceived fatal Injuries and Elijah Watkins, of Fithlan, was pain fully hurt. Sioux City Live Stock Market. Thursday's quotations on the Sioux fClty live stock market follow: Top jbeeves, $5.45. Top hogs, $6.20. Dank Teller to Prinon. William C. Anderson, former assist ant paying teller In the First National bank, of Kansas City, pleaded guilty rThursday to the embezzlement of j$M00 of the bank's funds and was sentenced to four years In the penlten- tUry More Pay for Firemen. Beginning Jan. 1, the pay of all flre tnen on the Big Four system will be In creased on an average of 7.77 per cent. fkowxs ron Ireland. Archbishop's Sermon In IMsfavor at Vatican. The local press of Rome has pub lished the summary which appeared In the Paris Matin of the sta'.ement Is sued by Archbishop Island, of St. Paul, on the France-vatlcan conflict. This1 summary has not found favor with the Vatican authorities, as it blames the French clergy, who are praised by the pope. The Osservatore Romano says this summary should be accepted with reserve as coming from an , Infected source, and explains that the corre spondent of the Matin In New York may have misunderstood the archbish op. In spite of the denials of the French government that It has made any re ply regarding the Vatican's protest to the powers on the subject of expulsion from France of Mgr. Montagnlnl, un til recently secretary of the papal nunciature at Paris, the Vatican has, been positively Informed that M. Plchon, the minister of foreign affairs for France, has made verbal state ments In answer to this protest to sev eral diplomatic representatives at Par Is and that he telegraphed the min ister's communication to their respect ive governments. According to the Vatican's authority M. Plchon said that Mgr. Montagnlnl had no diplomatic standing; that the papers sequestrated at the nunciature were unimportant, the Important doc uments having been removed pre viously, and as tho French government had not allowed the papal nuncio to correspond with the French bishops, much less could it permit Mgr. Mon tagnlnl to do so, , The Vatican now declares with au thority that the statement that docu ments were removed from the nunci ature before that building was search ed Is unfounded and calculated to de ceive, and avers that It did not ema nate from the Vatican, but from the French government. srnwAY FOR SPOKAXE. Franchise to Up Asked for Million Dol lar Project. Spokane is to have a million dollar subway, one mile in length, to connect the passenger and freight terminals of tho Spokane and Inland Empire Railway company, for which a fran chise will be asked at the next meet ing the city council. In making the official announcement Jay P. Graves, president of the company, which has 160 miles of electric line In its sys tem in eastern Washington and Ida- Trt, "said It Is prOposed-ailwr to "tmUda- line to Nine Mile Bridge, where work ' Is progressing on a $900,000 power house, and another to the granite quarries on the Little Spokane river, making in all 200 miles of line. The .subway will be 32 feet deep, 38 feet wide, the crown being 4 feet below j the surface of the street, the company I asking the right of way to operate ' either steam or electric trains over ' double tracks. The last named clause Is looked upon by prominent railroad men to mean that traffic arrangements will be made with the Chicago, Mil waukee and St. Paul railway to give It entrance to Spokane for the latter's main line at Tekoa, Wash. Mr. Graves announces also the subway, which is to be In the heart of the business dis trict, will be in operation In two years, work beginning ten days after the granting of the franchise. SHE MUST PAY FOR JEWELS. Mme. Gould Held Jointly Liable for Gems Purchased. Three remaining suits by Paris, creditors, with the object of making .Madame Gould (formerly Countess Bonl de Castellane) Jointly responsible; with the count for certain claims, wero decided Wednesday. The court found she was In no way responsible for the claims of M. Zetg- ler, one of the largest creditors, who claimed It had been the practice of the Castellanes ever since the mar rlage to appeal to him to extricate them from financial difficulties; but held her Jointly liable for Jewels val ued at $24,000, purchased from Mile. Nlmldoff, of Odessa, who sold the Jew els to the count through an Interme diary Jeweler. The court also found Madame Gould Jointly responsible for the sum of $57,000, the balance due to the Har togs for a Jewelry bill amounting to about $137,000, provided the bill was not paid. Three experts were appoint-' ed to appraise the value of the Jew elry. Killed In Dough Mixer. Falling into a sponge mixer full of dough, which he was feeding Wednes day, H. D. Vanklrk, of Columbus, O. whirled round and round until every bone In his body was crushed before the machine was stopped and his body was extricated. Called to Washington for Conference. United States Attorney Robert T. Devlin, of San Francisco, has gone to Washington In response to a telegram from Attorney General Bonaparte, who summoned him there for consul tation, presumably in connection the Japanese question. Traveler Drops Bomb. An unknown traveler dropped a bomb In the railway station at Khar kov, Russia, Wednesday upon alight' lng from an incoming train. Two, passengers were killed and many wounded by tho explosion. Three Persons Asphyxiated. James Harris, his wife, 13-year-old on and t-year-old daughter were as phyxiated by natural gas which es caped from a stove in their home in Niagara Falls, Out., Wednesday night. IX APTEAti TO ROOT. PIeront Morgan and OUmt Would Prod LcoM)Ul. A letter signed by J. Plorpont Mor gan, T)f, Lyman Abbott and other prominent citizens of New York was addressed to Secretary of State Elihu Root Tuesday, directing his attention to conditions in the Congo Free Btate, where. It Is asserted, flagrant Inhu manity exists," and urging him on be half of the American people to use the "moral support" of the United States government to correct the abuses the Congo natives are alleged to be suffer ing from. The communication Is as follows: "Over a year has passed since the report of the commissioners chosen by the chief executive and virtual owner of the Congo to Investigate conditions In that state was published. In spite of their natural desire to give all pos sible credit to their sovereign, the commissioners felt constrained to re port the existence of measures and practices of flagrant inhumanity. Among those measures and practices are the following: "1. The exaction of a labor tax so oppressive that many natives on whom It falls have little, If any freedom. "J. Appropriation of land to such an extent that the natives are practi cally pensioners within their own ter ritory. "3. The employment, under author ity of the government, as sentries of cruel, brutish blacks, chosen from hostile tribes, who murder, pillage and jrape the people for whose protection the government ts avowedly establish ed. "4. The abuse of the natives by i white representatives of officially rec iognlzed companies. ' "6. That the binding of little chil dren to years of labor at uncertain wages by contracts they do not un derstand, and even more serious mal treatment of children supposedly un der tho Immediate care of the gov- i eminent. "6. Great injustice In the adminis tration of the courts,' so that the na tives dread the name of Boma, the place where the Judicial system Is cen tralized. , "7, The sending out of punitive ex peditions, not for the purpose of estab lishing peace and order, but for the purpose of terrifying the natives into paying a tax which, as administered even the commissioners regard as in- I human. "It is to be remembered that these are not charges brought against the Congo government, but findings of the commission which , was appointed by the chief executive of the government to Investigate and report on the facts." STUATTOX COXTEST EXDS. Millions Become Avallablo for Vae of Charity. The executors of the estate of Win ,fleld Scott Stratton at Colorado Springs, Cello., announce that a final closing report will be made early in i 1907, when work will begin Immedl ately on the $1,000,000 Myra Stratton ; Home for the Poor. Stratton died four years ago, but settlement has been delayed by litiga tion. The total Involved In suits aggre gated $52,000,000, although the estate Is appraised by the court at $6,000 000. Nearly all these suits have been 'dismissed or disbarred excepting that of the state of Colorado for $358,000 Inheritance tax. Contention Is over the Interest only. " The executors are Dr. D. H. Rice and Carl Chamberlain, of Colorado Springs, and Tyson S. Dines, of Den jver. They are also trustees of - the home. Buildings costing $1,000,000 will be built, and the rest of the be quest, between $4,000,000 and $5,000, 1 000, will become an endowment The .home will probably be erected In Stratum's Park, near Cheyenne can. yon, in Colorado Springs' suburbs. MACKLIX OUT OF DANGER. Physician Says There la No Doubt of, Captain's Recovery. Capt. Edgar Macklin, of Fort Reno, ,Okla., continued to improve Tuesday and his physician stated positively that the patient would recover. The search for te negro assailant of Macklin Is being continued, but with no apparent success. The murder the ory has been discarded and the officers are now convinced that the intent was robbery. There was some excitement 'during the day when It was reported that a negro suspect had been arrest ed, but It proved that the man had been taken for stealing cotton. Lived Seventy-Seven Years In Asylum Having cost the state over $10,000 Lucy Darby Is dead at the asylum at Hopklnsville, Ky., aged 77. She was born in the Lexington asylum, her mother being a patient, and lived there until she was transferred here there until she was transferred to Hop klnsville when 25 years old. Col. Watterson to Go to Egypt. Henry Watterson and Mrs. Watter- son, of Louisville, Ky., have arrived at Barcelona, Spain, and will remain In that city a month, after which they will go to Egypt. . Discharged from Russian Army. Lieut. Gen. Subbotich, ex-governor general of Turkestan, has by an Im perial order been discharged from the army in. further punishment for all around laxnoss displayed by him governor general of Turkestan, for which he was removed Oct. 29. Minneapolis Man Cf;nnilis Suicide. Despondent beciUHo of tho death of his wife a year ugo I'eder Medjo, iwell to do contractor, of Minneapolis, I Minn., hanged himself early Tuesday, STATE OF NEBRASKA XEWS OF THE WEEK IX COX. DENSLD FOlftl. Suburban Saloon Held Vp Proprie tor Beaten Over the Head When He Offered Some Resistance Robber Makes His Escape. Using a revolver to enforce his com mands, a young man, alone and un masked, held up and robbod the pro prietor and two others In August Wolf's saloon, about one mile west of Dundee on the Dodge street road, near Omaha, early Friday evening. Wolf was badly bsatcn ca the head with the revofver when he failed to submit properly, later becoming unconscious from the Injuries, and Martin Tlbke, one of the other victims, was shot at when he tried to make a sly exit. When the lone highwayman had se cured all the money and valuables In sight, amounting to $62.65 In money, a certified check for $9.50 and a watch, he made hla escape . and no trace ot him has been found. The bold holdup occurred about 6:30 o'clock. Wolf,' the proprietor, and Tlbke, a farmer living not far away, and a third man, whose name has not been learned, were in the sa loon. Wolf lives in the building with his wife and family, the saloon taking up one room of the residence., The family was at home as usual, but no alarm was spread. That the nerve of the robber, who Is described as being 25 years old and smooth faced, came near falling htm at the critical moment is apparent from the fact' that he entered the sa loon shortly before 6 o'clock, ordered a drink for himself and then went out again. ' In a few minutes he re entered, ordered another drink, which he took alone, and again passed out the door. It was not until his third entrance that he made any move to oommlt a crime. After the . command to throw ut hands had been given the robber flrod a shot to check Tlbke in an attempt to escape, but no one was struck. Later when Wolf offered resistance, the In truder pounded him severely on Um head, inflicting a number of severe bruises. The third man made no move and no attempt was made to Injure him.' DIAMONDS EV THE WASH. Fremont Woman Sends C!otties to Laundry, Together with Jewels. One of the girls in the employ of n Fremont laundry was surprised while Ironing a union -fcultj. findB, diamond brooch and three diamond rings at tached to it near the waist, i The suit had Bone though the washing machine and the wrliiier ar..l dryer-without the gems being discov ered and the settings were but little worse for wear on account of their rough usage. They belonged to the wife of a wealthy business man of Fremont and their value is estimated at 1,500. The woman had fastened them to her 'in jderclothes for safe keeping and h-itl forgotten them until the proprietor cf the laundry told her that he had them. .Young M.in Shoots at Constable. Charles Bolen, son of Representa tive J. M. Bolen, of Ulysses, was ar rested at Ulysses Thursday evening for shooting at Constable Plglow, the shot Just going through his coat. Sheriff iWest was at once notified and Friday .morning went down and brought Mr. Bolen to David City to answer the charge of shooting with Intent to kill, to which he pleaded not guilty. His preliminary hearing was set for Fri day, Deo. 2$, and he was placed un der $300 bonds to appear at that time, which he furnished. Hypnotist Sued. Jessie Wiles, agent for the Pacific Express company at Columbus, has filed a petition in the district court claiming damages from Oliver B. Grif fith to the amount of $1,500. Mr. Grif fith gave a hypnotic performance last week and Wiles, at his request, went on the stage and did almost every k''-." of tom-fool things while hypnotized by Griffith. Wiles now says he received permanent injuries. Stacked nay Burns. Twenty-two stacks of hay belonging to Al Tlft, on land near North Platte, was burned Wednesday. The tonnage destroyed was in the neighborhood oi 160, and the total loss will amount to over $1,200. The exact origin of the fire is unknown, but It 13 presumed ts have been started by two boys who were seen going in that direction for the purpose of hunting. New Electric Line. The report Is that the electric rail way from Omaha, to run in u south .westerly direction to ArborvKle, has jthe right of way purchauer out and has 'purchased considerable right of way. It looks very much as If the electric railway will be built. York, on the south, hopes to have the company build to York. Hit by President's Order. About forty people from Fremont and vicinity are taking considerable interest in the coal land question In Wyoming, for each of them gave $100 ,and a power of attorney to a very smooth promoter by the name of Mil ,ler to locate a quarter section ,f coal or oil land In Carbon county, Wyo ming. Nine Horses Burn. The livery barn at Waterbu.-y own ed by James Brenlln burned Thurs day. Nine head of horsec were burned to death. The barn was a to tal loss and there was no liiBursnco on the property. The causo of the flro la unknown. Enfini'or Teal Drops Dead. Andrew Teal, one of the oldest und bent known Northwestern engineers, who had been in the service for many years, dropped dead from heart fail ure at Norfolk. IX EXCTTlXO "ROUGH HOUSE," Lincoln Salvation Army Idcr Hit Leading Educator. After an exciting "rough house" at the Salvation army headquarters in Lincoln Christmas morning bath See retary C. E. Prevcy, of tho charity or ganization, and Capt. Klndler, of the Salvation army, were arrested and re leased on ball. Prevcy got two black tyee and a countenance badly disfig ured. Ho called at the army headquar ters with two friends to disprove an assertion of Klndler and Is said to have opened the excitement by calling the latter a liar. Prevey says Klndler did the battering. However, the cap tain alleges that an applicant for char ity Interfered and did the knocking. The row Is supposed to have result ed from the scathing letter of Dr. An drews, of the state university, who de nounced the army as a fake. Prevey Is a member of the state university faculty. When the row started Klndler was directing the giving away of the Cbristmas baskets. PAUPER INHERITS FORTUNE. Patrick Mulligan, Inmate of Poor house. Heir te Brother's Estate. Patrick Mulligan, for four years an Inmate of the Douglas county poor house, has been found to be one of the heirs to a large estate left htm by the death of his brother, Andrew Mulli gan, at Fan Francisco about a year ago. Mulligan is nearly 10 years of age and refuses to believe in his good fortune until tangible evidence Is giv en him, and In the meantime Is satis fied to remain a charge on the county. An Omaha law firm succeeded In finding Patrick Mulligan at the poor house a few days ago. He had not heard from his wealthy brother, or, In fact, any of his family, for years, and supposed they were all doad. The news of his gqpd (qrtune caused him tho greatest surprise, but he said he would hold his Job at the poor farm until he raw the actual color of the money to which ho Is supposed to be an hel:'. SERIOUS COLLISIOX. Eleven Tinlnnicu Hurt and Five Cars Damaged at Sidney, A rather serious collision occurred in tho Kidney yards a few days ago. Eleven trainmen were more or less se verely Injured and five cabooses dam Egjd. Tho cabooses wore occupied by tho trainmen and were being switched in the west end of the yard. The air on train No. 9 refused to work and tho train ran past the depot and hit tho cabo(s9.j on the side, causing two of them ti turn over, and damaging thj ethers. . t Those Injured wero Conductors Dick Williams and Arch Hqward and Erakcman Le Dloyt. Morris, Nelson, Aldrich and Garrison. Williams and E,prrl; wre tho most severely Injur ed. .. , ' 1 . ' ' ROAD AR'ST NOT SEIZE COAL. Bt:r'.l;:,tc,ri Is Rcxtrulned by Federal Court. Tho Burlington railroad Is accused of cnuvlnjr a famine In northwestern Nebraska by confiscating all coal ship ped over Its linos, in a petition for in junction filed in the federal court at Omaha Monday morning. Tho petition was filed by J. " E. Woodward & Co., coal miners, of Dlotz, Wyr, and an Injunction was asked restraining the Burlington from seizing coal destined to private par ties. Juuge Munger signed the order, which was immediately served on the Curllngton officials. He u ne Burned at Xorth Platte. Will Swlgart's house was burned at North Platte. The fire was caused by th explosion of a lamp, which, Mr. Swlgurt had rellllod, and after lighting it, stepped Into another room for a pnlr of sitssors with which to trim the wick. Upon returning, he found the oil in tho lamp had caught fire and a few seconds luter exploded, setting Are to the entire room. Mr. Swlgart's wife and children wero still In bed and Mr. v.igart hud Just time enough to get them out of tho house when the whole interior ' In a blaze and none of their clothing or furniture could be saved. Child ftcscucd from felinme. A girl only 16 years of age, whs gave her nvao as Madeline Brown. was taken from a house of 111 repute at Omaha and placed for safe keeping In the matron' department at the city Jail. The girl's real name Is known and her father Is employed in Omaha anJ U highly respected. Stock Rucr Stirs Railroad. J. T. Oore, a stoc.t buyer at Liber ty, instituted a damage suit at Beat rlco for $2,000 against the Burlington company for delay In makfrg a shlp ment of cattle from Denver to Chlca go. Plaintiff alleges he lost heavily becuuse the stock failed to arrive In Chicago In a reasonable length of time, BLotting Boy Located. Ocorgo Frederick, a boy about 19 yeuri old., who mysteriously disappear ed from his home near Beatrice sever al month ago, has been located at Lincoln ly his father. He Is employed a driver for a transfer company and offers no explanation for leaving home. Oarnofrle L'.Sirury for TciunHch. Tho Tecumseh city council has pass d a r'olutlcn. and placed the same iifn roaorii, pledging tho council to p.nni-ary the $600 required by 'rdrew Carpejio for the maintenance of the proposed new library building. Lain Gives Wuy. ' Tho dam went out at Hweeiy lake, in tho rluc, and It Is now doubtful Aiuthcr it will be posMble to put up "o In supp y the people of Blue Hill The l"o put up at Blue Hill was also h!;prd to different towns near by, Mon wero put to work at once to re- .air tho cam. Mutt (Jo to K:iiool. T'n -Ptnes of 150 children who have .ct hltenuod school are In possession of the chief of police at Columbus, aat the .aw will l enforced. Ml Wllllnin Cnnpion, In Jul! at Seward for child abandonment, who was par doned recent'y by Gov. Mickey after conviction on a paternity charge, was sgaln pardoned Monday afternoon by the gpvernor and the pardon Is broad enough to cover two charges and any order to the contrary which may be Issued by the Judge of the district court. The sheriff of tho county re fused to recognize the right of the governor to issue the pardon In this case and attorneys tor Campion secur ed a writ of habeas corpus from Judge Letton returnable Jan. 3. and the pris oner has been released under $1,000 bond. The woman In tho case has married since Cumplon was sent to Jail. He strenuously denied his re sponsibility. Campion has been In jail for over thirteen months rather than give bond that he would pay a Judg ment of $1,000 secured against him on a paternity charge. The matter was finally taken before the governor, who after reviewing tho evidence, ordered the man's release. The county author ities doubted the right of the governor to pardon In a semi-ciimlnal case and ho was then arrested and convicted on charge of abandoning tho child. A hearing was held on this Monday and the governor Issued his second pardon to the man. ' The superlntendontof tho Institute foi feeble minded youth, makes a show ing In his report to tho governor that ts not only interesting, as to amount of valuable crop production.' but dem onstrates what the possibilities are for making even the unfortunates at the Institution self-supporting, aa all of the field crops wereralsod by the in mates with the assistance of one farm er. The report shows that of field crops there were grown 532 bushels of wheat, 118 bushels of rye, 940 bushels of oats, 2,000 bushels of corn, 25 tons of cune, 30 tons of alfalfa, 1,900 bush els of potatoeu, 100 bushels of sweet potatoes, 700 bushels of sweet corn, 600 bushels of tomatoes and 300 bush els of onions. Beuides these there was grown a large lot of garden vegetables, Including 400 bushels of turnips, 150 bushels of peas, 5,000 heads of cab bage, 200 heads of cauliflower, also peppers, parsley, beans, cucumbers, lettuce, egg plant, pumpkins, squash, and many of the smaller varieties of garden vegetables, aggregating lit the whole at market value $7,641.35. The annual report of the treasurer of the university athletic board shows the total receipts for the year were $17,689.50 and the expenditures $15, 296.27. leaving a balance of $2,393.27. The largest single (tern of the receipts was Nebraska's share of the proceeds ot tne Chicago root Dan game, s,- 280.25. The largest Item of expense was that of guarantee and percentages to visiting teams. $3,695.88. The fol lowing Is a summary of the report: Receipts from football, $14,256.70; ex penditures, $10,713.16; balance, $3,- 642.54; receipts from baseball, $2,- 079.50; expenditures, $1,830.63; bal ance, $248.87; basket ball receipts, $726.25; expenditures, $771.81; deficit $45.66; track athletic receipts, $274.. 55; expenditures, $497.04; deficit, $222.49; cost of sending cross country team to Chicago, $138.15. Jesse T. Trennery, of Pawnee City, former president of the Nebraska Bankers' association, was In Lincoln on business and expressed himself re garding legislation which he considers should be enacted this winter. "A law should be enacted whereby trust companies could be organised with power to administer estates," said Mr. Trennery. "I would not favor a law which allowed these companies to do a banking business, but every one has a right to have a permanent body to administer an estate. When one man is appointed administrator at his death the estate is placed in Jeopard, while If the estate is administered by a com pany it Is a perpetual body and large sums of money would be saved to es tates which are now lost by the en forcement of the present law." . The report of State Superintendent McBrlen show the total resources of, all the school districts In the state at the close of the school year July 9, 1906, amounted to $6,485,464.70, while 'the expenditures for the school yeur amounted to $5,452,289.05. The num ber of schoot children In the state be tween the ages of C and 21 ycurs was 373,829. An effort will be mud a during the legislature to get the revenue law amended so that the reserve funds of fraternal societies can be assessed and taxed. Under the present law the su preme court has ruled that this fund can be offset by the outstanding poll cles, which virtually wipes out the as sessment. The state house was closed Christ- may and all of the state officers and their employes observed Christmas with the true Christmas spirit. Treas urer Mortensen was at Ord, but the other officers were In Lincoln, while most of the employes have gone to their homes. Gov. Mickey and his fimilly, and his family's family, had a Christmas treat at the executive mansion, and eat din ner together. Mrs. E. S. Mickey was the only absent one, she having been called home by the death of her grund father. The annual meeting of the Nebraska Prison association will bo held at the First Christian church on Friday even lng, Jan. 4. Dr. Q. w. Martin, super Intendent of the society, announced that the program would be an Interest lng one, with addresses on prison work by Judge M. B. Rebse, Dr. M. A Bullock and Dr. B. M. Long. Reports of the officers of the association will be read and the general work discussed, Prison workers from all over the state will be present and the session will be a noteworthy one PRESIDENT EP.EAXS MESSAGE RECORD, lp to adjournment Ur tlm holiday! President Roosevelt had sent righteeQ message to Congress during tho preseat session, nn average of one end a half pel lay. The following ts a list of the mes. sages : Dee. S CnnRreiu convenrd. lec. 4 Mmiiagff on the treat meat of crlok Inn li liy prolmtlnn. Metif transmitting the annnsj report of tbe tivli Service Con mission. Message on control of tbe yello fever. MessRfre on church claims In tht Philippines. Message revommenrtlnir tbe author) lis (Ion of tbe President to die miss officer of the nary without trial. ' Dee. 5 Message recommending legislation tor Alaska. Dec. 10 Message recommending th rlra buraement of th owners of tht lirltlsb schooner Mills. Message transmitting th ord!. nances of ths Executive Council of i'orto Klco. Message recommending nyment ts Lieut-Col. L. K. 8cotL;U. 8. A, for an Invention ue by tht army. Message recommending the returs of custom duties collected from certain Urttlsh Importers. Message recommending nn appro, pristlon for the payment of thi cable company whose wires weH cut by Admiral Dewey during tbe war with Hpaln. Dec. 11 Message describing conditions It I'orto HI Co and recommendln cltlienshlp for Its people. Message transmitting the report ot the Keep Commission on the pur chase of depnrtment supplies, Dec. 17 Message desrrlhlng conditions 01 the lsthipua of Panama, j j Message concerning rerlaioa of th. ' ( public land law. . Message recommending reorgnnUa. tlon of the naval personnel. Iiee. 18 Message transmitting the report o Hecretary Metcalf on the Japa. nese questions. Deo. 10 Message on the discharge without honor of three companies of th Twenty fifth United States la fnntry. Dep. 20 Congress adjonrned for ,the holl days. ; ' President Roosevelt will send still an other message, to Congress immediately af ter the holiday recess. This will deal with the subject of Immigration. PERISH IN RACE RIOTS. Whites aad Blacks Flafct riereele In Mlaslastppl, In a race riot which began 'with the fntnl wounding of a conductor by a ne gro on a Mobile and Ohio railway train nt Crawford, Miss., and ended Vlth aa outbreak at Scooba, Miss., at least fif teen jtersons were killed and perhaps a score wounded. Following the- shooting at Crawford an outbreak occurred at Wa hnhtk in which five negroes were killed. Shortly after the departure'' ot tht troops sent to quell the disturbance riot ing broke out afresh at Scooba, ,five miles south of Wahalnk, and five negroes art reported to have been killed. Of tbe Hcooba clash reports 'are conflicting, some reports placing tbe number of killed and wounded at a score. Troops were imme diately ordered to the scene. ' 1 Conductor R. N. Harrison of the Mo bile and Ohio was tbe man shot and fa tally wounded by, a negro at Crawford, Miss. The negro,' In turn, was shot by Harrison and before he could escape was. killed by a posse. Three companions wit were with the negro fled to tbe woods. One of these was later captured and shot to death. Tuesday night a negro became Involved In an altercation with two whit meu uloard a train near Artesla, Miss., and when the station was reached waa taken from the train and killed. In a dispatch to Gov. Vsrdaraan Sheriff Trout of Kemper county described tbe situation as critical. RAILROADS EARN $2,319,760,030. Interstate Comnalaslwa'a Hepetart Cot era 320,020 Miles. A preliminary report of the Interstate commerce commission on the income ac count . of the railways of the United States for the year ended June 30 last, contains returns from companies operat ing 220,026 wiles of lines, or about 09 per cent of the mileage that wHi be cov ered in the final report. , The total gross earnings of tie roads were $2,310,700,030, beng equivalent t $10,643 per oiile. Passenger ; earning were $018,553,034, or $2,811 per mile, and freight earnings $1,040,042,802, or $7,458 per mile. Operating expenses were $1,532,103,153, or $0,1)03 per mile. The net earnings of tbe roads were- $787,507,877, being $3,580 per mile, and nearly $97,000,000 more than the corre sponding amount reported for the previ ous year. Income from other sources than those of operation aggregated $132, 024,082. The dividends paid amounted o $229,400,508 and taxes $38,003,288. , Sparks from the Wires Five leading coal and wood dealers of Danville, Va., were Indicted for forming an unlawful combination. Secretary of War Taft was elected president of tbe American National Red Cross at its annual meeting in Washing ton. Committees of the Nittioua! Alliance of Billposters and Killers will visit th lrcus managers and ask for new con tracts with higher wages. , The retail dry goods establishment of Burden, Smith & Co, at Macon, Oa., was burned with a loss of $225,000 and esti mated Insurance of $125,000. The dreaded San Jose scale has been discovered iu several fruit orchards in Massachusetts. This pest does great dam age to fruit trees and shrubbery. Julian Salvatore, 35 years old, a New York saloonkeeper, was shot and instant ly killed in bis home in an east side tene ment by an unknown assassin. Engineers on the Now York, New Ha ven and Hartford railroad have accepted a scale of wages submitted by the turn puuy and the dispute is ended. The in crease in wages Is from 15 to 35 cents a day. George Miller and hla wife, an aged couple In the service of Ur. F. X. Straess-' ley, 021 Washington street, Allegheny, Pa., were found In a room over tbe phy sician's stable, having been asphyxiated by natural gas which escaped from the . stove while they were sleeping. The man lu the Mattewnn asylum In New York, kuown as Andrew J. White, who now says he is Qorge A. KimmeL the missing bank cashier of Arkansas City, Kan., has never been identified by the officials of the Farmers' State back of that place as Klmmel and they do act believ be is Kiuimel.